Its founder, AustralianJulian Assange, has called it "an uncensorable system for untraceable mass document leaking and public analysis."[1] There was also evidence that ties the group, and Assange in particular, to George Soros.[2]

Contents

State Department

Damaging leaks from the U.S. State Department were the third in a series of data dumps to the media. Embarrassing interactions between heads of states, damning details of positions and policies involved. Hillary Clinton was shown to request eavesdropping on certain people.

Democratic National Committee

Seth Rich (1989-2016) was a Sanders' supporter who leaked DNC emails to WikiLeaks.[3] His bullet ridden body was found on a dark Washington DC street two weeks before Hillary's nominating convention.

The Democratic National Committee (DNC) emails provided by Wikileaks showed clear collusion between Clinton, mainstream media outlets, and the DNC to smear Bernie Sanders. Thousands of hopeful millennials felt betrayed by the Democratic party. DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz was forced out on the eve of the convention, less than 24 hours after dozens of emails were published by Wikileaks showing her and her staff rigging the primary elections for Hillary Clinton.

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has offered $20,000 cash reward for the arrest and conviction of Seth Rich's killers or killer, the alleged whistleblower who provided the DNC emails to Wikileaks and was murdered execution style in early July 2016. Hillary says of Assange in an email, "Can't we just drone this guy?"[4] To silence Assange, Wikileaks internet access was cut by the government of Ecuador after the release of Hillary's private paid speech to Goldman Sachs. Wikileaks Director, Prof. Gavin Macfayden, was found dead the following week. Macfayden's death was the third of a close associate of Assange in 6 months.[5]

Russia

Reportedly classified Russian documents are in the media pipeline that embarrasses Kremlin leaders Putin and Medvedev.

Iraq-related files

After the release of the U.S. military Iraq files, there have been calls for an electronic offensive against the organization. In August 2010, Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell left open the possibility of offensive action against WikiLeaks. In October 2010, Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, sent a note out through Twitter saying: "Another irresponsible posting of stolen classified documents by WikiLeaks puts lives at risk and gives adversaries valuable information." [7]The Washington Times calls WikiLeaks "threat to U.S. national security" and "should be treated accordingly." Not only is WikiLeaks a threat to our troops on the battlefield, it is a threat to people and families cooperating with the United States. Our enemies are learning how the military operates. As of December 1, 2010 Wikileak documents are no longer hosted on Amazon.com servers in Ireland. No indication if Octopuce servers in France will cease hosting files. Earlier in 2010, WikiLeak servers were located in Iceland.